You could go your whole life without tucking into a serving of cheese blintzes, which is typically two or three of them because nobody could eat just one. But that would be a shame. Done right, they are a delicacy that brightens a brunch table and upgrades a pancake supper.
You tend to find the kind of blintzes I’m referring to on delicatessen menus, where they are often overstuffed, and you can buy them frozen by the half dozen, which begat a blintz souffle recipe so viral even Ina Garten took a swing at it. They are also the favored dish of Shavuot, a two-day Jewish holiday beginning Saturday night that embraces dairy and commemorates the receiving of the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai. Maven Joan Nathan has suggested a pair of cheese-filled packets placed side by side resembles those stone tablets, a notion that makes me smile.
The opportunity for top-notch blintzing is to inhale them freshly made by knowing hands, and just ferried to your plate from being pan-fried in butter so that tops and bottoms are browned just enough to create a gently crisp distinction between the tender pancake exterior and the lightly sweetened filling within.
The pancake part is critical, because it must be thinner than your typical crepe, to allow for an envelope-type fold. With this recipe from chef Ed Scarpone, your hands can become the knowing kind. The batter must be smooth. Unlike many blintz recipes that call for the batter to rest, we push it through a fine-mesh strainer to get the thin, lump-free consistency required. The pan should be 8-inch and nonstick, heated just so. Measure the amount of the first pancake’s worth in a designated cup, then muscle memory and a mental note will allow you to eyeball subsequent portions.